Capron v. Van Horn

258 P. 77, 201 Cal. 486, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 491
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8546.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 258 P. 77 (Capron v. Van Horn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capron v. Van Horn, 258 P. 77, 201 Cal. 486, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 491 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court in and for the county of Imperial. Sarah F. Donley, the patentee of the land in controversy, instituted this action for its recovery and to quiet her title thereto. In his answer to the complaint the defendant denied that the patentee had any right, title, or interest in and to said property or any part thereof and by way of cross-complaint alleged the equitable title to said property to be in himself. The cross-complaint concluded with a prayer that the patentee be required to execute and deliver to the defendant a deed of grant conveying said property to him. After trial the court adjudged the patentee to be the owner and entitled to the possession of the land. An appeal from said judgment was taken by the defendant, which appeal resulted in a reversal of the judgment (Donley v. Van Horn, 49 Cal. App. 383 [193 Pac. 514]). Thereafter and pending a retrial the patentee died and the present plaintiff was, by order of court, duly substituted in her personal capacity as grantee of the patentee and in her representative capacity as administratrix of the estate of said deceased patentee. Upon the second trial of the cause judgment was again entered in favor of the plaintiff, whereupon the present appeal is prosecuted by the defendant. •

The complicated facts giving rise to this litigation are fully stated in the following portion of the opinion of the district court of appeal rendered upon the first appeal:

“The land, which is situated in Imperial county, has been in the exclusive occupancy of defendant ever since some time prior to December 26, 1911, on which date he filed in the proper office, viz., the local land office at Los Angeles, his application to make entry under the desert land law. The land is a part of a large tract that, on April 2, 1909, was withdrawn from entry by the secretary of the interior in *489 connection with the Yuma reclamation project, pursuant to authority conferred by the act of June 17, 1902 (32 Stats, at Large, p. 388), commonly known as the Reclamation Act (U. S. Comp. Stats., sees. 4700-4708). This withdrawal was under what is known as the first form of withdrawal; that is, it was the withdrawal of lands that, in the opinion of the secretary of the interior, may be needed in the construction and maintenance of irrigation works. . . .
“On May 10, 1915, while the land still was withdrawn from entry or sale under the secretary’s withdrawal order of April 2, 1909, plaintiff, who claimed to be the owner of a certain section of state school land for which the state had issued to her a patent, made selection of the land in controversy under the act of May 2, 1914 (38 U. S. Stats., 372), in lieu of her school land, and a patent of the" lieu land so selected by her was issued to her by the United States on August 9, 1916. The act under which plaintiff made her lieu selection—the act of May 2, 1914—provides that ‘the state of California, or its grantees, may, with the approval of the secretary of the interior, reconvey to the United States any of the lands heretofore granted to said state in the townships authorized to be resurveyed by the act of July 1, 1912, . . . and select in lieu thereof an equal amount of vacant, unappropriated, surveyed, unreserved, nonmineral public lands within said state.’ . . .
“Subsequently to the withdrawal of the land from entry on April 2, 1909, under the first form of withdrawal authorized by the act of June 17, 1902, viz., on March 17, 1913, the reclamation service reported to the secretary of the interior that certain of the lands so withdrawn, including the land in controversy, were not necessary to the reclamation project, and recommended the revocation of the withdrawal order. The day following the filing of this report, viz., March 18, 1913, the assistant secretary of the interior indorsed on the report of the reclamation service an order approving the recommendation. This indorsement did not operate as an absolute and immediate revocation of the withdrawal order of April 2, 1909. For, by the express terms of this order of March 18, 1913, so indorsed on the report of the reclamation service, the assistant secretary directed the commissioner of the general land office to ascertain whether the lands included in the report of the reclamation *490 service had been otherwise withdrawn or reserved by law, and, if not, to cause notice to be given that they will be open to settlement and entry, at times to be fixed by the commissioner. Before such notice could be given, viz., on April 17, 1913, the order of March 18, 1913, was suspended, after a copy thereof had been forwarded to the register and receiver of the Los Angeles land office. The order that the assistant secretary had so indorsed on the report of the reclamation service on March 18, 1913, was thus suspended ‘pending determination of the best method of opening the lands to entry. ’ At the date of the suspension of the order of March 18, 1913, viz., on April 17, 1913, it was further ordered that the land that plaintiff proposed to select in lieu of her state school land be not restored to entry, in order that the land department might effect the exchange that it was proposed to make with her if and when the bill that later was enacted as the act of May 2, 1914, should become a law. On the same day that this suspension order of April 17, 1913, was made the assistant commissioner of the general land office sent a telegram to the register and receiver of the Los Angeles land office notifying the latter that the order of March 18, 1913, revoking the withdrawal of the lands, had been suspended, and to return the revocation order to the general land office in Washington. This was done. Thereafter no attempt was made by the land department to revoke the original withdrawal order of April 2, 1909, in so far as the land in controversy is concerned, until November 3, 1915, on which date the first assistant secretary of the interior approved a report of the commissioner of the general land office recommending that, as to this land, the withdrawal order of April 2, 1909, be revoked, and that the lieu selection that plaintiff previously had made on May 10, 1915, under the act of May 2, 1914, be approved. The net result of the foregoing is that, as to the land in controversy, the withdrawal order of April 2, 1909, was in full force and effect from the time when it was made until November 3, 1915.
“On December 26, 1911, defendant, as we already have stated, tendered to the local land office in Los Angeles an application to make a desert land entry on the land in controversy. This application was rejected on the ground that the land had been withdrawn from entry by the with *491 drawal order of April 2, 1909, and that such withdrawal was still in full force and effect. Defendant appealed successively to the commissioner of the general land office and to the secretary of the interior, by both of whom his right to make such entry while the land was withdrawn for irrigation works was denied. During all these times defendant was a citizen of the United States, possessed of all the qualifications essential to qualify him to make entry upon such of the public lands as might be open to entry and legal settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 77, 201 Cal. 486, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capron-v-van-horn-cal-1927.